RESUMEN
In this article, experiments on tablets containing a model compound, grazoprevir, were conducted to explore how media selection for a quality control dissolution method can influence the sensitivity for the dissolution method toward drug crystallinity detection in an amorphous solid dispersion formulation. The experiment shows that under ideal nonsink conditions with respect to crystalline solubility, dissolution can indeed be predictive of crystallinity in the formulation. However, the limit of detection for crystallinity with quality control dissolution can change based on inherent variabilities in the drug product. In addition, it is demonstrated that the method's sensitivity and accuracy might be reduced if the crystalline particles are sufficiently small with respect to the solid dispersion particles. To further demonstrate the limits of the dissolution method, a dissolution model was also explored to simulate and predict the sensitivity of the dissolution response toward crystallinity based on solubility in the media and particle size of the crystals.
Asunto(s)
Química Farmacéutica/métodos , Composición de Medicamentos/normas , Modelos Químicos , Control de Calidad , Quinoxalinas/farmacocinética , Amidas , Carbamatos , Cristalización , Ciclopropanos , Liberación de Fármacos , Estudios de Factibilidad , Límite de Detección , Tamaño de la Partícula , Quinoxalinas/química , Solubilidad , Sulfonamidas , ComprimidosRESUMEN
Amorphous solid dispersions are a promising option for managing compounds with poor aqueous solubility. However, for compounds with high melting points, thermal stability limitations, or poor solubility in volatile solvents, conventional routes of hot melt extrusion or spray drying may not be viable. Co-precipitated amorphous dispersions (cPAD) can provide a solution. For the material studied in this paper, the cPAD material that was seemingly identical to spray dried material in terms of being single phase amorphous (as measured by DSC and XRD ) but showed slower dissolution behavior. It was identified that physical properties of the cPAD material could be improved to enhance wettability and improve dissolution performance. This was achieved by incorporating the cPAD material into a matrix of water soluble excipients generated via evaporative isolation routes. Importantly, this approach appears to offer another route to further increase the drug load in final dosage units and is significant as increased drug loading generally results in slower or incomplete release. Results showed successful proof of concept via in vitro biorelevant dissolution and confirmatory canine pharmacokinetic studies yielding comparable exposure for capsules comprised of conventional spray dried material as well as capsules with elevated drug load comprised of cPAD hierarchical particles.